BFF FILM & FESTIVAL BLOG
New York’s Finest Soccer Film Festival Celebrates its 10th Edition Next Week!
One of New York City’s amazing perks for film lovers is its many specialty film festivals. One of these gems is the Kicking + Screening Soccer Film Festival which will be held from May 22-25 at the Scandinavia House (58 Park Ave). Now in its 10th edition, Kicking + Screening highlights the world’s game in all its facets, showcasing a diverse selection of stories. While all revolve around the beautiful game, they also touch on many broader issues such as women empowerment, LGBTQ discrimination or how to deal with loss.
The opening night film “Football For Better or For Worse” highlights FC Rosengård, one of the world's top women’s clubs with Brazilian star player Marta, and their struggle to survive in a male-dominated industry. It’s followed by “I Love Hooligans”, a short doc about a gay hooligan that is trapped between the love for his club and his sexual identity. Another fantastic feature doc is “Nossa Chape” which celebrated its world premiere at SXSW 2018. Directors Jeff & Michael Zimbalist and co-director, Julian Duque, provide a compelling documentary that follows the Chapecoense club beyond the tragic demise of all but three players in an airplane crash, and how fans, their city, and the club itself are trying to move on.
We have secured a 15% discount for you with code KSNY. To buy tickets and view the full program visit http://www.kickingandscreening.com/ks-ny-2018. This year’s world cup may be without team USA but that doesn’t mean you can’t get your soccer fix this summer!
Written by
Tilo Zingler
We’re providing live coverage of the 6th Annual Bushwick Collective Block Party w/interviews of Busta Rhymes, Foxy Brown and Cam’ron
Hey Friends!
We have some exciting news to share below. We are partnering with The Bushwick Collective to cover their upcoming Block Party this Saturday June 3rd. We’ll be interviewing headliners Busta Rhymes, Foxy Brown and Cam’ron as well as capturing the excitement of the entire event.
You can read our recent press release with all the details here: http://bit.ly/2rp1EAD
xox
BFFTeam
FESTIVAL REVIEW: 2016 TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL
The Bushwick Film Festival loves independent film festivals! Especially those, like the Tribeca Film Festival, that take place in our very own city. #Tribeca2016 had its 15th edition last week, and we attended a number of panels, screenings and talks, which we shared with all the indie film lovers out there who follow us on Instagram and Facebook. If you missed the experience on social media, you can read a summary below of the films we liked and didn’t like, along with what inspired us. And remember to follow us on Twitter, Instagram and like us on Facebook so we can stay connected!
Films
Califórnia
Set in Brazil during the 80s, Califórnia follows a young girl between the time of her first period and her first sexual experience. Estela (Clara Gallo) is desperate to escape her life and embark on a trip with her uncle to California. But she is forced to explore her identity and desires while the looming AIDS epidemic of the era threatens her wishes. Califórnia follows most of the ingredients of a coming-of-age story, except that it is told from the feminine perspective. As director Marina Person noted at a Q&A following the last screening, this is an important difference. It’s hard not to enjoy this movie and even fall for some of the characters. Califórnia proves to be another example of how, no matter the language or setting, humanity has more universal stories than we’d like to admit.
— Moraima Capellán Pichardo
Live Cargo
Live Cargo (directed by Logan Sandler) offers up a story I couldn’t invest myself in, and yet, I didn’t want to miss a single frame. Early into the film’s runtime, the opaque nature of its storytelling left my mind wandering, but – even without a plot I could attach my concerns to – it still undoubtedly made an impact. Most of the moviegoing public, myself included, probably hasn’t seen an abundance of digital black & white films. It’s possible some audiences have never even seen a single one. Let’s face it, B&W is not “in” and may never be again. What’s special about Live Cargois that it doesn’t look like the 120-year-old The Arrival of a Train, or even Raging Bull. Its textures vary from those films because new cinema in 2016 looks like the present, not the past.
Anti-digital crusaders like Quentin Tarantino and Christopher Nolan will choose death before going digital, but their renouncement of a new era of films and filmmakers is no different than when your parents told your teenage self to turn down that loud and offensive punk rock record that you were really into. Live Cargo’s creative team embraces modern filmmaking techniques, and in the process delivers something that is different from all of the films your favorite auteurs made, but every bit as gorgeous.
— Joseph Willwerth
The Charro of Toluquilla
A few minutes before the screening, I was walking behind a man wearing a black sombrero and a plaid button-down. Given that we were in the Tribeca neighborhood, it was easy to recognize him as El Charro de Toluquilla. I had also been keeping up with the documentary ever since reading about it over at IndieWire, when it premiered at the Guadalajara Film Festival.
The Charro of Toluquilla provides a brief but intimate look at Jaime García, who embodies the image of traditional macho Mexican horsemen (charros), while living unapologetically as HIV-positive. In over three years of production, director Jose Villalobos Romero managed to integrate himself into the life of El Charro, who at a Q&A reassured the audience that his personality is authentic, no matter how over-the-top it might seem to be. (Sidenote: To everyone’s delight, he energetically ran up and down the theater aisles, handing over the microphone for questions). El Charro is hard to forget, and he doesn’t disappoint.
The documentary portrays a refreshing and often laugh-out-loud funny take on a father-daughter relationship and the topic of marriage. It is the type of storytelling we need in a time when Mexican men are often portrayed as caricatures for political gain.
— Moraima Capellán Pichardo
Wolves
Director Bart Freundlich, piled on more drama and surprises in Wolves than this moviegoer could handle. The film includes a degenerate gambler, an alcoholic, a pervert, a struggling author and a bad father – and that’s only Michael Shannon’s character. Newcomer Taylor John Smith excels on the screen as a high school basketball star at odds with his dad (Shannon), and navigating situations that no 18-year-old should have to be prepared for. Freundlich takes every coming-of-age archetype and pushes it to the extreme, throwing subtlety out the window, but by doing so, he fails to give proper care to such serious subject matter.
— Joseph Willwerth
Talks and Panels
Ira Sachs and Andrea Arnold
During a Tribeca Talk, Ira Sachs (Love Is Strange) spoke with director Andrea Arnold (Fish Tank) about her career of filmmaking adventures and her new film, American Honey, set to debut at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival. When Sachs asked what she found most shocking about her time shooting in America, Arnold detailed the horrors of poverty and drugs that the crew witnessed while filming in the South. When he asked her about her fears, she surprised everyone by claiming that she has none. In fact, Arnold seems to thrive on making low-budget independent films and has no qualms about being a woman in an industry dominated by men. Arnold’s secret to achieving her one-of-kind realism on the screen is to make movies like she prepares a meal in the kitchen, “without a recipe.” The auteur consistently challenges her creative self: American Honey was filmed with countless non-actors. who she only gave new pages of the script to just prior to each day of filming. Arnold apparently heeds her own advice to the audience: “Take the reins and go for it.”
Idina Menzel & Marc Platt
A packed audience had the pleasure of catching Idina Menzel (Frozen) in a very different setting during a Tribeca Talk, moderated by producer and friend Marc Platt (Wicked). There wasn’t a person seated who didn’t love hearing about how, when she was younger, the world-renowned singer had actually believed that she would one day be able to star as one of the black leads in Dreamgirls. Ever since her parents brought her to a Broadway show in her pajamas, Menzel has been nothing less than enamored with singing and acting, in all its forms. Though her career is full of successes, she emphasized that there have been just as many lows, just as many rejections, as there were times when she felt acceptance for her work. Through it all, she has appreciated all of the moments in her career and, for the record, would be overjoyed to be CGI’d into the long-in-the-works Wicked movie (if it ever gets made).
Menzel also runs A BroaderWay Foundation, a camp that fosters the creativity of underprivileged young girls and gives them the opportunity to dream big, just like she did when she was their age.
— Joseph Willwerth
Festival Review: 2016 DOC NYC
The Bushwick Film Festival is a huge supporter of independent films and filmmakers! So last week, we got our industry badges and attended several panels, industry events and films at DOCNYC—the largest documentary film festival in America. While at the fest we also ran into a couple of recent BFF alumni that we want to give a shout out to: Tyler Johnston, director of My Father’s Land and Benjamin Shweky, director of Chocolate Cake.
House on Coco Road directed by Damani Baker
Films we saw include: The House on Coco Road directed by Damani Baker; a film that moves effortlessly through decades of documents and material, while detailing the falsehood of Ronald Reagan’s 1983 Grenada invasion and the lives it affected most; Kid Yamaka directed by Matt Ogens, a stylish and insightful VICE Fightland short, which looks at the trials and tribulations of a boxer’s life and how his colorful past fuels his performance inside of the ring; and Gleasondirected by J. Clay Tweel, which offers an in-depth portrait of a former NFL players change in purpose, as he takes on ALS and commits himself to passing on a piece of who he is before it’s too late. We also saw Woman on Fire, directed by Julie Sokolow and 86-32, directed by Randy Wilkins; the reviews of which you can find below.
86-32 – Directed by Randy Wilkins
During the 1988 Olympics in South Korea, if you were an opponent of Roy Jones Jr. — the young, black, unconventional and all-powerful boxer, also known as Superman — he beat you. Unless of course you were South Korean. In this ESPN 30 for 30 short, an older Jones relives the infamous 88’ finals match where a corrupt jury handed over what should have been his gold medal, to Si-Hun; a South Korean Native that he bested by 54 points. You can find the controversial fight on Youtube but 86-32 mostly forgoes archival footage of a battered Si-Hun in favor of talking head style interviews. In a market oversaturated with sports-action films, director Randy Wilkins wisely chooses to focus on Jones’ personal retelling of the events; fair, considering it was his voice that was drowned out by Olympic bureaucracy. Listening to him, you wouldn’t know a day had past. This is a man who knows the truth but still can’t grasp it. Jones’ story resonates and it’s easy to see why: a handful of suits knocked him off the path to international stardom and took his dignity away. In response, Jones looks right into the camera and asks, why not give it back? We recommend that you get to know the Roy Jones Jr. story better by watching the film here for free.